These awards are going to the dog writers

The Dog Writers Assn. of America honors experts in the craft with Maxwell awards and a big ceremony – their version of the Oscars.

Some of the country’s top dog writers cover the Westminster Kennel… (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles…)

NEW YORK — This was the dog writers' biggest night.

The only things missing were the red carpet and interminable speeches.

And the dogs.

But they were there in spirit at the recent awards ceremony of the Dog Writers Assn. of America, which each year honors the men and women who write about man's best friend.

"This is our version of the Emmys, the Grammys and the Academy Awards," member and past award-winner Mary R. Burch said as she opened the evening at the Hotel Pennsylvania.

For the next three hours, more than 50 medallions, cash prizes and a trophy with a blue bone attached were handed out in a variety of categories, from droll ("Dogs vs. Cats: 10 Reasons Puppies Are Better") to dry ("Dachshund DNA Samples Help Advance Understanding About Hemangiosarcoma"), underscoring what dog writers say is the broad range of their craft.

"People who are not in and of the dog world think, 'Dog writers. What do they know?'" said Terry Cardillino, former editor of Ruff Drafts, the group's quarterly newsletter, and of the Courier, the official magazine of the Portuguese Water Dog Club of America. "People who are in the dog world regard it as an incredible expertise."

Cardillino has won seven Maxwells — named for Maxwell Riddle, one of the group's founding members — for her editing and writing.

"When I tell people I spent all these years in dogs, they think, 'Oh, that's nice,'" said Cardillino, who edited the Courier from 1999 through 2012, and later edited Ruff Drafts for a year. "They have no idea."

The Dog Writers Assn. of America was formed in 1935 by about three dozen writers — most of them sports reporters who covered dog shows. Membership now numbers nearly 700, according to the group's secretary, Pat Santi, who says the growth reflects the widening interest in dogs.

"You can only write so many books about how to put a collar around a dog, so now people are looking at the psychological problems of dogs, about dogs in war, about using dogs to deal with stress," said Santi, a registered nurse who joined the club after writing a book about Cardigan Welsh corgis.

The group's members also include teachers, veterinarians, attorneys, psychologists, photographers, graphic artists and writers such as newspaper columnists and celebrity ghostwriters.

There are even some cat writers.

"There's a lot of crossover," said Susan M. Ewing, former president of the Cat Writers Assn. and a longtime member of the Dog Writers Assn. of America. "There is always going to be a need for both."

You only have to look at pet industry statistics to see the interest in all things pet-related. Americans spent more than $53 billion on their pets in 2012, a 4.7% jump over the previous year, according to the American Pet Products Assn. In the United States, 47% of households include at least one dog, and 46% have a cat.

"It's a huge part of our life and our economy," said Michelle Maskaly, editor in chief of Pet Age magazine, who worked as a reporter and editor at several news organizationsbefore moving to Pet Age in 2012.

She has never looked back. "News was my passion, but pets are different," Maskaly said. "If you're having a bad day or get laid off, the animal is there for you."

At this year's awards ceremony, arrivals were greeted by a large poodle made of white silk flowers. Downstairs, the pet-friendly hotel's lobby was teeming with dogs on leashes, dogs in carriers and dogs cradled in protective arms as their owners arrived for the Westminster Kennel Club show starting the next day.

Nominees, newcomers and past winners talked about what makes a great dog writer and why the world needs them. All agreed that those who dismiss dog writing as fluff fail to see the bigger picture.

"I think all of us do this because we not only have a love for dogs and a passion for them, but because we like to think that something we're doing could help someone with their dog," said Elaine Gewirtz, the contest chairwoman and a longtime dog writer who lives in Westlake Village, Calif., with her husband and four Dalmatians.

Gewirtz has written 16 books — "Pugs for Dummies" and "Fetch This Book" among them — and countless columns and articles for dog-related magazines.

This year, she was one of the judges sorting through the hundreds of print and online nominations, covering books, magazines, blogs, calendars, newspaper articles and more.

Ranny Green, a former sportswriter, editor and columnist who retired from the Seattle Times in 2008, fought tears as he accepted his prize for an online article about therapy dogs who comforted people in Newtown, Conn., after the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012.

Green has been at least a part-time dog writer since the 1970s, when a piece he wrote about adopting a dog brought more reader letters and phone calls than any of his previous stories. "That told me something," said Green, who convinced his editors to start a pet column. "They were floored by how much response we got."

Eve Adamson, who was honored for her article on dachshunds and hemangiosarcoma, a deadly canine cancer, had flown in from her home in Iowa City to receive her award.

"I would say the No. 1 response I get when I say I'm a dog writer is: 'There's such a thing as a dog writer?'" said Adamson, who has also written dozens of books on food, health and non-pet topics. It was a freelance assignment in the 1990s — "How to Assemble a Puppy Starter Kit" — that launched her writing career.

Most dog writers don't do it full time.

But there is an emotional draw that dog writers, even part-time ones, say brings them back to their subjects.

"They're like kids to a lot of people. They really are," Cardillino said. "And they're man's best friend."